State, National Organizations Petition W.Va. Supreme Court To Keep Huntington, Cabell Opioid Case Alive

A group of national and state organizations are asking the state Supreme Court to side with Cabell County and Huntington in their lawsuit against major opioid distribution companies. 

A group of national and state organizations are asking the state Supreme Court to side with Cabell County and Huntington in their lawsuit against major opioid distribution companies. 

The Amici Curiae, or friends of the court, are organizations that have an interest in the outcome of the case.

“The opioid crisis represents one of the greatest threats to public health in our lifetime, with profound consequences for the communities Amici serve,” the Amici said in the brief. 

The case pivots on the legal definition of what is considered a public nuisance. After Judge David Faber ruled narrowly on what defines a public nuisance, Cabell and Hunting lost their case against the companies. The Amici told the court in its brief that Faber’s decision was overly restrictive and inconsistent with West Virginia law.

“(The decision) prevents opioid distributors from being held responsible for the costs of abating the crisis they caused,” the Amici said in the brief. “And improvidently diminishes their duty to avert the further spread of the crisis to almost nothing.” 

The localities appealed the decision in the U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, which asked  the state Supreme Court to define the legal reach and definition of a public nuisance.

The Cabell County Case needs a broad description to stay alive, much like what the state of West Virginia used in a separate suit.

“The court should answer the certified question in the affirmative, holding that West Virginia Common Law defines public nuisance to include the conditions caused by distribution of controlled substances,” the Amici said in the brief. 

The organizations represented in the brief are the National Association of Counties, the County Executive of America, the National League of Cities, the International Municipal Lawyers Association, the West Virginia Sheriffs Association, the West Virginia Association of Counties, the County Commissioners Association of West Virginia, and the West Virginia Municipal League. 

In the brief they said that a narrow definition would absolve major drug companies of their responsibility for creating an opioid epidemic. 

Two More West Virginia Counties Sue Drug Companies

Two more West Virginia communities have joined others around the state in suing drug companies over the opioid epidemic.

Media report the Berkeley County Council and the Jefferson County Commission filed lawsuits recently against drug manufacturers and distributors, accusing them of fueling the local opioid epidemic by shipping too many pain pills. The companies have denied wrongdoing.

The move comes shortly before a hearing where a panel of judges will decide whether to consolidate dozens of similar lawsuits filed across West Virginia and other states.

Martinsburg lawyer Stephen Skinner, who’s representing the two counties, says he favors consolidating the cases to get efficient justice. Media report at least eight local governments in West Virginia oppose combining the lawsuits, saying it would drive up costs.

W.Va. Pain Doctor Pleads No Contest to Drug Distribution

A north-central West Virginia doctor has been convicted of illegally distributing prescription pain pills.

U.S. Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld II says 75-year-old Edita Milan of Fairmont pleaded no contest to maintaining a drug involved premises and four drug distribution counts Tuesday in federal court in Clarksburg. Ihlenfeld says the judge accepted the no contest plea over the government’s objections.

The offenses are punishable by decades in prison and millions in fines, although federal sentencing guidelines likely will call for much less.

Milan ran a pain management office out of Bridgeport. Prosecutors have alleged that Milan was treating more than twice as many patients as she was permitted to treat with narcotics.

Six co-defendants have pleaded guilty to related charges.

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